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Freeman's Journal

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Freeman's Journal

THEATRE ROYAL

... culiar that the words are all but totally lost on the audience. Yet Mr. Stretton is always effective and often pleasing. His speaking voice is as strongly marked by peculiarity as his singing voice, with this addition, that it appears to lack the exquisite ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... being of oplialon thist he requires repose, Mr. Lover's new drmna, .,which has bleen long in preparailon, and of which report speaks 7vry favourably, is positponed tit Monday, the 14th lnstant-drfondno Peo. ...

[ill] THEATRE

... associated the names of some of the grest5st ornament of the dramatic profeseion-eais 'f i generally it is agreeable to be able to speak favour- aqly. His performance on Saturday niglt5. hOwever, 'although not without fault,' Wt i4finitely better than anything ...

FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE

... professional services of Mr. Morriaon have been ever rendered with proverbial generosity and cheerfulness. This alone, not to speak of some four and thirty years devoted to the intellectual amusement of our citizens, will surely render Mr. Morrison's beneft ...

FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE

... there by the Fnlperor, untder the 01Peral to e Rubini, who bas engaged a new tenor, of tie rlllieti5Of00 ofb wilem report speaks highly, for tile openint t 0 i, in the Russian capital. etaea APPROACHING MARRIAGES 1so IrliGH Lirx,_ The nuptials of Lady ...

QUEEN'S ROYAL THEATRE

... celebrated play of ?? Daddy Hlardacre, in .whichli he is said to have surpassed himself will be pre- sented this evening. Speaking of Mr. Robson's acting in the part, the 1/orning Post says:-1 A more awful picture of avarice working in thc veins, mu1scles ...

QUEEN'S ROYAL THEATRE

... have repeatedly spoken in terms of approbation, and now that the machinery worlms without any mistakes it is impossible to speak in terms sufficiently eulogistic of its grandeur anti effect. The new comedy of Tihe Serious Fnamily followed, and cer- tairly ...

THE THEATRE ROYAL

... was anxious to make hvir,;: success. So far as thle g'r7a s recor-d s' of tbe Garrick Theatre iscaoneerred, hiea'r, can only speak as from a ditt mce. No u cord seaeon of My Friend the Pr r'e' a. take place here. One v;reek woun; ma-e s suffice, and itis ...

MUSIC

... now favourite French air which. throwing the '1 Mariellalse in the back ground, has become the French national authem-weo speak of the air And song, ' Partant Pour la Syrie. This song, chaunted by Mrs. Mahon, aided by the full choral force of the concert ...

ROTUNDO—MR. HARRISON'S CONCERTS

... which seemed to have affected the resonance and power of her voice on her first appearance in Dublin. The provincial press speaks in the warmest terms of her excellence as an operatic vocalist, and record- the evident preposession of the most refined and ...

THE ITALIAN OPERAS

... of admired perfection, some of the grandest and most po- pular compositions of the great maestros of Italan opera, slot to speak of their presentation with every advantage that vocal and dramatic talentcould confe. Of the Oshpeo and Eswydice, a piece entirely ...

LITERATURE

... .ness. The 'Parnell Movement has bad a most remarkable success in Enpland in its original and expensive edition, and i speaks eloquently for l ir. O'Connor's literary ability as well as for his h1 bistorical instinct that it has been universally 0 ...